Dangerous fire conditions expected as fight to save Swan Hills continues
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Extreme heat, low humidity, and strong winds are expected to fuel a wildfire that has put a northern Alberta town under threat and forced hundreds of people from their homes.
A red flag watch is in effect for regions across the province, including Swan Hills, signalling a volatile and potentially dangerous day for crews battling the flames of an out-of-control wildfire burning eight kilometres away.
Red flag watches are issued by Alberta Wildfire meteorologists when intense and dangerous conditions are expected to develop.
The watches are issued as a warning to wildland crews that critical weather conditions are developing, including significant changes in wind speed or direction, that could lead to extreme fire behaviour.
Hot, dry, and unstable weather patterns are expected today leading to strong crossover conditions.
'Not an average summer day'
The Edith Lake wildfire sparked on Sunday and spread rapidly due to unpredictable winds and tinder-dry fuels.
By Monday evening, 1,300 residents of the town were ordered to flee south as the flames drew closer.
On Tuesday afternoon, as temperatures grew sweltering, fanning the fire's eastern flank, the flames breached the highway north of town.
The fire continues to spread. In an update Wednesday, emergency officials said the fire has now burned 3,629 hectares, up from around 2,300 hectares the day before.
On Wednesday, crews are expected to focus on containing the southeast side of the wildfire in the area where it crossed Highway 33, which remains closed.
WATCH | Wildfires trigger evacuations across Western Canada:
Wildfires trigger evacuations across Western Canada
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The current red flag watch was issued for Wednesday and Thursday's burning periods.
Most of the province remains under an extreme heat warning and unforgiving temperatures are expected to fuel the fire activity in Swan Hills.
Temperatures will be 10 to 15 degrees above seasonal, with highs between 25 C and 32 C in regions across the province.
The forecast also warns of strong south-southeast winds across the province, with gusts up to 45 km/h in the western boreal forest and northern east slopes by Wednesday afternoon.
Red flag conditions are expected to continue Thursday as another cold front moves in from B.C.
Wildfire expert Mike Flannigan said the campaign to contain a fire often hinges on the weather, but more specifically the wind.
Extreme winds blowing across the province this week, triggered by a cold front moving across the west, continues to cause problems for crews on the frontline.
"These extreme events really drive the fire world," said Flannigan, the scientific director of Thompson Rivers University's Institute for Wildfire Science, Adaptation and Resiliency in Kamloops, B.C.
"It's not an average summer day. It's those hot, dry, windy days. And if you have ignition, away we go."
More than 40 fires are burning across Alberta Wednesday morning, but Alberta Wildfire has said the blaze near Swan Hills is a priority.
Firefighters, supported by helicopters, air tankers, and heavy equipment, continue to fight the fire.
A provincial incident command team has arrived and will be co-ordinating response efforts.
Jeff Goebel, a councillor for the town of Swan Hills, said local and provincial crews are doing all they can to contain the flames.
Goebel, who has lived in Swan Hills since 1985, said the community is familiar with the threat of fire and faced a previous evacuation in 2023 when residents fled as smoke and ash filled the sky.
This evacuation was calmer and less unsettled, he said. But that familiarity has not brought comfort to displaced residents, he added.
Many are worried about the homes they left behind and can't help but think of other Alberta communities that have been devastated by wildfire in recent years, Goebel said.
"We went through this before," he said.
"But there's always worry.
"You see the news reports from other places and unfortunately, that's fresh in people's minds: Slave Lake, Fort McMurray, Jasper. Those images are imprinted in people's minds."
'Our new reality'
Flannigan is expecting to see more fire on the landscape this summer in Alberta and across the Prairies.
He said the season began with campaigns to contain fires that had sparked the previous year and burned through the winter.
Meteorologists caution that this summer will be warmer and drier than average, bringing drought-like conditions that will escalate the fire risk.
It has already proved a difficult season across the west, particularly along the Ontario-Manitoba boundary, where wildfires have already offered a preview of the risks at play this summer.
Several communities have evacuated in recent days as fast-moving fires tear across the region. In Saskatchewan, at least 4,000 people have evacuated their homes and communities due to aggressive wildfires in the northern reaches of the province.
With the community of Flin Flon on the verge of evacuation, Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew said people should be prepared to lend a hand to evacuees as wildfires threaten his province.
Weather Network meteorologist Doug Gillham cautioned that the summer's hot and sunny forecast highlights "that you can get too much of a good thing."
The big picture forecast has some similarities to the summer of 2021, Gillham said.
That year Western Canada saw drought, wildfires, water shortages and a deadly heat wave over British Columbia.
Drought could be a serious concern across the southern part of the Prairies along with warmer-than-normal temperatures for northern parts of Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba, Gillham said.
Flannigan said challenging days on the fire line are becoming more common as wildfire seasons grow longer, and more extreme.
"This is our new reality. We're going to see more fire and smoke," he said.
"Because of the warmer temperatures, we're seeing drier fuels, so it's easier for fires to start and spread. And more of that fuel is available to burn, which leads to higher-intensity fires, which are difficult to impossible to extinguish."
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